LAReview
Included In
Great Mexican food is as synonymous with LA as bad traffic: no matter where you are, you’ll find some. But as varied as Mexican restaurants are here—hole-in-the-wall taquerias, Oaxacan mole palaces, mariscos trucks, and classic margarita-filled cantinas—there are a limited number of splurge-y, upscale spots. Places like Damian and Taco Maria are legends, but when it comes to high-end Mexican restaurants in LA, there are still plenty of seats at the table. And Loreto makes a strong case for its inclusion.
Dinner at this sprawling Frogtown restaurant offers the full package: a blockbuster space, buzzy energy, great cocktails, and exceptional seafood dishes that strike the perfect balance between tradition and creativity.
Loreto’s dining room is an all-out production. There are exposed rafters, concrete floors, and a giant wrap-around bar, giving it a cavernous feel that stands out in Frogtown. The quiet, mostly residential neighborhood by the LA River is home to several noteworthy spots—Salazar, Wax Paper, Spoke Bicycle, and Lingua Franca—but nothing on the scale of Loreto. There are multiple dining areas, an outdoor bar, and a tree-filled courtyard where their daytime-only concept, Za Za Za, goes down. There’s even a valet stand out front. If you didn’t know better, you might assume you took a wrong exit and ended up in the Arts District. And we don’t mean that in a bad way, especially since dinner here provides much more than impressive aesthetics.
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
Fair warning: If you don’t eat seafood, you might want to sit out dinner at Loreto. At last count, every dish save for dessert involves fish or shellfish of some sort, including various sashimis, carpaccios, aguachiles, tostadas, and large-format grilled dishes. Even the beet ceviche comes smothered in a tuna-enriched sauce. But don't assume that seafood equals "delicate flavors": the cooking here is spicy, acidic, and in-your-face, with bold and unexpected ingredient combinations filtered through the lens of Sinaloa and Baja. Take the Thai-leaning papaya ceviche, made with juicy chunks of scallop, red chiles, and shredded green papaya. Or the decadent tostada a la Joaquin, which practically towers off the plate with seared slices of otoro, soy-marinated onion, and blistered tomatoes, all doused tableside in yuzu vinaigrette by your server. And then there's Loreto’s pièce de résistance—a butterflied whole fish serves with rice, beans, salsas, blue corn tortillas, and quesadillas—which amounts to the kind of epic feast you might associate with weddings or holidays.
As with most restaurants serving premium seafood, Loreto can get pricey fast. Fortunately, there’s more than one way to make a meal here. Popping in solo for a plate of spicy aguachile and a crisp gin and mezcal martini at the bar is just as satisfying as taking over a big table with friends and ordering off every section of the menu. If you’re on a date and want to keep things reasonable, stick to the whole fish spread, throw in the chocolatey carajillo dessert, and you’ll be able to walk out for under $50 a person. Whichever way you approach Loreto, you’ll leave thinking it about the next day, and then some. That’s the sign of a great restaurant, high-end or otherwise.
Food Rundown
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
Toro Sashimi
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
Rojo Aguachile
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
Papaya Ceviche
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
Tostada A La Joaquin
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
Pesca Del Dia
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
Mar-Esquites
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
Mil Hojas
photo credit: Jessie Clapp
Carajillo